Passwords are secrets. There is no reason to decrypt them under any circumstances. It is crucial that passwords are stored in a way that they can be *verified* but not *reversed* in any way, even by insiders. To accomplish this, store the salted hashed value of the password. Preferably use a different random salt for each password hash instead of a constant long salt.

Passwords are secrets. There is no reason to decrypt them under any circumstances. It is crucial that passwords are stored in a way that they can be *verified* but not *reversed* in any way, even by insiders. To accomplish this, store the salted hashed value of the password. Preferably use a different random salt for each password hash instead of a constant long salt.

DRAFT CHEAT SHEET - WORK IN PROGRESS

Introduction

This article is focused on providing guidance to storing a password in order to help prevent password theft. Too often passwords are stored as clear text. Thus the password can be read directly by the database’s administrator, super users or via data theft by SQL Injection. Database backup media is also vulnerable to password theft via password storage. It is recommended that you avoid storing the clear text password or an encrypted version of the password.

Password Storage Rules

Passwords are secrets. There is no reason to decrypt them under any circumstances. It is crucial that passwords are stored in a way that they can be *verified* but not *reversed* in any way, even by insiders. To accomplish this, store the salted hashed value of the password. Preferably use a different random salt for each password hash instead of a constant long salt.

Use a modern hash algorithm

SHA

bcrypt

Use a long cryptographically random salt

If each password is simply hashed, identical passwords will have the same hash. There are two drawbacks to choosing to only storing the password’s hash:

In order to solve these problems, a salt must be concatenated in front of the password before the digest operation.

A salt is a cryptographically random number of a fixed length. This salt must be different for each stored entry. Since rainbow tables are already passing 24 characters, a salt of 24 bytes or longer is the recommended minimum length.